System and method for parallel secure content bootstrapping in content-centric networks

Solis , et al. July 4, 2

Patent Grant 9699198

U.S. patent number 9,699,198 [Application Number 14/325,185] was granted by the patent office on 2017-07-04 for system and method for parallel secure content bootstrapping in content-centric networks. This patent grant is currently assigned to CISCO TECHNOLOGY, INC.. The grantee listed for this patent is CISCO TECHNOLOGY, INC.. Invention is credited to Glenn C. Scott, Ignacio Solis, Ersin Uzun.


United States Patent 9,699,198
Solis ,   et al. July 4, 2017

System and method for parallel secure content bootstrapping in content-centric networks

Abstract

One embodiment of the present invention provides a system for retrieving a content collection over a network. During operation, the system determines additional information associated with the piece of content that is needed for consumption of the content collection; generates a plurality of Interests, which includes at least one Interest for a catalog of the content collection and at least one Interest for the additional information; and forwards, concurrently, the plurality of Interests, thereby facilitating parallel retrieval of the content collection and the additional information.


Inventors: Solis; Ignacio (South San Francisco, CA), Scott; Glenn C. (Los Altos, CA), Uzun; Ersin (Campbell, CA)
Applicant:
Name City State Country Type

CISCO TECHNOLOGY, INC.

San Jose

CA

US
Assignee: CISCO TECHNOLOGY, INC. (San Jose, CA)
Family ID: 53513984
Appl. No.: 14/325,185
Filed: July 7, 2014

Prior Publication Data

Document Identifier Publication Date
US 20160006747 A1 Jan 7, 2016

Current U.S. Class: 1/1
Current CPC Class: H04L 65/4084 (20130101); H04L 67/06 (20130101); H04L 65/80 (20130101); H04L 63/123 (20130101); H04L 63/20 (20130101); H04L 67/327 (20130101); H04L 67/32 (20130101)
Current International Class: H04L 29/06 (20060101); H04L 29/08 (20060101)
Field of Search: ;370/392,389,395 ;726/26

References Cited [Referenced By]

U.S. Patent Documents
817441 April 1906 Niesz
4309569 January 1982 Merkle
4921898 May 1990 Lenney
5070134 December 1991 Oyamada
5110856 May 1992 Oyamada
5214702 May 1993 Fischer
5377354 December 1994 Scannell
5506844 April 1996 Rao
5629370 May 1997 Freidzon
5845207 December 1998 Amin
5870605 February 1999 Bracho
6047331 April 2000 Medard
6052683 April 2000 Irwin
6085320 July 2000 Kaliski, Jr.
6091724 July 2000 Chandra
6128623 October 2000 Mattis
6128627 October 2000 Mattis
6173364 January 2001 Zenchelsky
6209003 March 2001 Mattis
6226618 May 2001 Downs
6233617 May 2001 Rothwein
6233646 May 2001 Hahm
6289358 September 2001 Mattis
6292880 September 2001 Mattis
6332158 December 2001 Risley
6363067 March 2002 Chung
6366988 April 2002 Skiba
6574377 June 2003 Cahill
6654792 November 2003 Verma
6667957 December 2003 Corson
6681220 January 2004 Kaplan
6681326 January 2004 Son
6732273 May 2004 Byers
6769066 July 2004 Botros
6772333 August 2004 Brendel
6775258 August 2004 vanValkenburg
6862280 March 2005 Bertagna
6901452 May 2005 Bertagna
6915307 July 2005 Mattis
6917985 July 2005 Madruga
6957228 October 2005 Graser
6968393 November 2005 Chen
6981029 December 2005 Menditto
7007024 February 2006 Zelenka
7013389 March 2006 Srivastava
7031308 April 2006 Garcia-Luna-Aceves
7043637 May 2006 Bolosky
7061877 June 2006 Gummalla
7080073 July 2006 Jiang
RE39360 October 2006 Aziz
7149750 December 2006 Chadwick
7152094 December 2006 Jannu
7177646 February 2007 ONeill
7206860 April 2007 Murakami
7206861 April 2007 Callon
7210326 May 2007 Kawamoto
7246159 July 2007 Aggarwal
7257837 August 2007 Xu
7287275 October 2007 Moskowitz
7315541 January 2008 Housel
7339929 March 2008 Zelig
7350229 March 2008 Lander
7362727 April 2008 ONeill
7382787 June 2008 Barnes
7395507 July 2008 Robarts
7430755 September 2008 Hughes
7444251 October 2008 Nikovski
7466703 December 2008 Arunachalam
7472422 December 2008 Agbabian
7496668 February 2009 Hawkinson
7509425 March 2009 Rosenberg
7523016 April 2009 Surdulescu
7542471 June 2009 Samuels
7543064 June 2009 Juncker
7552233 June 2009 Raju
7555482 June 2009 Korkus
7555563 June 2009 Ott
7564812 July 2009 Elliott
7567547 July 2009 Mosko
7567946 July 2009 Andreoli
7580971 August 2009 Gollapudi
7623535 November 2009 Guichard
7636767 December 2009 Lev-Ran
7647507 January 2010 Feng
7660324 February 2010 Oguchi
7685290 March 2010 Satapati
7698463 April 2010 Ogier
7698559 April 2010 Chaudhury
7769887 August 2010 Bhattacharyya
7779467 August 2010 Choi
7801069 September 2010 Cheung
7801177 September 2010 Luss
7816441 October 2010 Elizalde
7831733 November 2010 Sultan
7873619 January 2011 Faibish
7908337 March 2011 Garcia-Luna-Aceves
7924837 April 2011 Shabtay
7953014 May 2011 Toda
7953885 May 2011 Devireddy
7979912 July 2011 Roka
8000267 August 2011 Solis
8010691 August 2011 Kollmansberger
8069023 November 2011 Frailong
8074289 December 2011 Carpentier
8117441 February 2012 Kurien
8160069 April 2012 Jacobson
8204060 June 2012 Jacobson
8214364 July 2012 Bigus
8224985 July 2012 Takeda
8225057 July 2012 Zheng
8271578 September 2012 Sheffi
8271687 September 2012 Turner
8312064 November 2012 Gauvin
8332357 December 2012 Chung
8386622 February 2013 Jacobson
8447851 May 2013 Anderson
8462781 June 2013 McGhee
8467297 June 2013 Liu
8473633 June 2013 Eardley
8553562 October 2013 Allan
8572214 October 2013 Garcia-Luna-Aceves
8654649 February 2014 Vasseur
8665757 March 2014 Kling
8667172 March 2014 Ravindran
8677451 March 2014 Bhimaraju
8688619 April 2014 Ezick
8699350 April 2014 Kumar
8718055 May 2014 Vasseur
8750820 June 2014 Allan
8761022 June 2014 Chiabaut
8762477 June 2014 Xie
8762570 June 2014 Qian
8762707 June 2014 Killian
8767627 July 2014 Ezure
8817594 August 2014 Gero
8826381 September 2014 Kim
8832302 September 2014 Bradford
8836536 September 2014 Marwah
8861356 October 2014 Kozat
8862774 October 2014 Vasseur
8868779 October 2014 ONeill
8874842 October 2014 Kimmel
8880682 November 2014 Bishop
8903756 December 2014 Zhao
8923293 December 2014 Jacobson
8934496 January 2015 Vasseur
8937865 January 2015 Kumar
8972969 March 2015 Gaither
8977596 March 2015 Montulli
9002921 April 2015 Westphal
9032095 May 2015 Traina
9071498 June 2015 Beser
9112895 August 2015 Lin
9137152 September 2015 Xie
9253087 February 2016 Zhang
9270598 February 2016 Oran
9280610 March 2016 Gruber
2002/0002680 January 2002 Carbajal
2002/0010795 January 2002 Brown
2002/0038296 March 2002 Margolus
2002/0048269 April 2002 Hong
2002/0054593 May 2002 Morohashi
2002/0077988 June 2002 Sasaki
2002/0078066 June 2002 Robinson
2002/0138551 September 2002 Erickson
2002/0152305 October 2002 Jackson
2002/0176404 November 2002 Girard
2002/0188605 December 2002 Adya
2002/0199014 December 2002 Yang
2003/0004621 January 2003 Bousquet
2003/0009365 January 2003 Tynan
2003/0033394 February 2003 Stine
2003/0046396 March 2003 Richter
2003/0046421 March 2003 Horvitz
2003/0046437 March 2003 Eytchison
2003/0048793 March 2003 Pochon
2003/0051100 March 2003 Patel
2003/0061384 March 2003 Nakatani
2003/0074472 April 2003 Lucco
2003/0088696 May 2003 McCanne
2003/0097447 May 2003 Johnston
2003/0099237 May 2003 Mitra
2003/0140257 July 2003 Peterka
2003/0229892 December 2003 Sardera
2004/0024879 February 2004 Dingman
2004/0030602 February 2004 Rosenquist
2004/0064737 April 2004 Milliken
2004/0071140 April 2004 Jason
2004/0073617 April 2004 Milliken
2004/0073715 April 2004 Folkes
2004/0139230 July 2004 Kim
2004/0196783 October 2004 Shinomiya
2004/0218548 November 2004 Kennedy
2004/0221047 November 2004 Grover
2004/0225627 November 2004 Botros
2004/0233916 November 2004 Takeuchi
2004/0246902 December 2004 Weinstein
2004/0252683 December 2004 Kennedy
2005/0003832 January 2005 Osafune
2005/0028156 February 2005 Hammond
2005/0043060 February 2005 Brandenberg
2005/0050211 March 2005 Kaul
2005/0074001 April 2005 Mattes
2005/0132207 June 2005 Mourad
2005/0149508 July 2005 Deshpande
2005/0159823 July 2005 Hayes
2005/0198351 September 2005 Nog
2005/0249196 November 2005 Ansari
2005/0259637 November 2005 Chu
2005/0262217 November 2005 Nonaka
2005/0281288 December 2005 Banerjee
2005/0286535 December 2005 Shrum
2005/0289222 December 2005 Sahim
2006/0010249 January 2006 Sabesan
2006/0029102 February 2006 Abe
2006/0039379 February 2006 Abe
2006/0051055 March 2006 Ohkawa
2006/0072523 April 2006 Richardson
2006/0099973 May 2006 Nair
2006/0129514 June 2006 Watanabe
2006/0133343 June 2006 Huang
2006/0146686 July 2006 Kim
2006/0173831 August 2006 Basso
2006/0193295 August 2006 White
2006/0203804 September 2006 Whitmore
2006/0206445 September 2006 Andreoli
2006/0215684 September 2006 Capone
2006/0223504 October 2006 Ishak
2006/0242155 October 2006 Moore
2006/0256767 November 2006 Suzuki
2006/0268792 November 2006 Belcea
2007/0019619 January 2007 Foster
2007/0073888 March 2007 Madhok
2007/0094265 April 2007 Korkus
2007/0112880 May 2007 Yang
2007/0124412 May 2007 Narayanaswami
2007/0127457 June 2007 Mirtorabi
2007/0160062 July 2007 Morishita
2007/0162394 July 2007 Zager
2007/0171828 July 2007 Dalal
2007/0189284 August 2007 Kecskemeti
2007/0195765 August 2007 Heissenbuttel
2007/0204011 August 2007 Shaver
2007/0209067 September 2007 Fogel
2007/0239892 October 2007 Ott
2007/0240207 October 2007 Belakhdar
2007/0245034 October 2007 Retana
2007/0253418 November 2007 Shiri
2007/0255677 November 2007 Alexander
2007/0255699 November 2007 Sreenivas
2007/0255781 November 2007 Li
2007/0274504 November 2007 Maes
2007/0275701 November 2007 Jonker
2007/0276907 November 2007 Maes
2007/0283158 December 2007 Danseglio
2007/0294187 December 2007 Scherrer
2008/0005056 January 2008 Stelzig
2008/0005223 January 2008 Flake
2008/0010366 January 2008 Duggan
2008/0037420 February 2008 Tang
2008/0043989 February 2008 Furutono
2008/0046340 February 2008 Brown
2008/0059631 March 2008 Bergstrom
2008/0080440 April 2008 Yarvis
2008/0082662 April 2008 Dandliker
2008/0095159 April 2008 Suzuki
2008/0101357 May 2008 Iovanna
2008/0107034 May 2008 Jetcheva
2008/0107259 May 2008 Satou
2008/0123862 May 2008 Rowley
2008/0133583 June 2008 Artan
2008/0133755 June 2008 Pollack
2008/0151755 June 2008 Nishioka
2008/0159271 July 2008 Kutt
2008/0165775 July 2008 Das
2008/0186901 August 2008 Itagaki
2008/0200153 August 2008 Fitzpatrick
2008/0215669 September 2008 Gaddy
2008/0216086 September 2008 Tanaka
2008/0243992 October 2008 Jardetzky
2008/0250006 October 2008 Dettinger
2008/0256138 October 2008 Sim-Tang
2008/0256359 October 2008 Kahn
2008/0270618 October 2008 Rosenberg
2008/0271143 October 2008 Stephens
2008/0287142 November 2008 Keighran
2008/0288580 November 2008 Wang
2008/0291923 November 2008 Back
2008/0298376 December 2008 Takeda
2008/0320148 December 2008 Capuozzo
2009/0006659 January 2009 Collins
2009/0013324 January 2009 Gobara
2009/0022154 January 2009 Kiribe
2009/0024641 January 2009 Quigley
2009/0030978 January 2009 Johnson
2009/0037763 February 2009 Adhya
2009/0052660 February 2009 Chen
2009/0067429 March 2009 Nagai
2009/0077184 March 2009 Brewer
2009/0092043 April 2009 Lapuh
2009/0097631 April 2009 Gisby
2009/0103515 April 2009 Pointer
2009/0113068 April 2009 Fujihira
2009/0116393 May 2009 Hughes
2009/0117922 May 2009 Bell
2009/0132662 May 2009 Sheridan
2009/0135728 May 2009 Shen
2009/0144300 June 2009 Chatley
2009/0157887 June 2009 Froment
2009/0185745 July 2009 Momosaki
2009/0193101 July 2009 Munetsugu
2009/0198832 August 2009 Shah
2009/0222344 September 2009 Greene
2009/0228593 September 2009 Takeda
2009/0254572 October 2009 Redlich
2009/0268905 October 2009 Matsushima
2009/0274158 November 2009 Sharp
2009/0276396 November 2009 Gorman
2009/0285209 November 2009 Stewart
2009/0287835 November 2009 Jacobson
2009/0287853 November 2009 Carson
2009/0288076 November 2009 Johnson
2009/0288143 November 2009 Stebila
2009/0288163 November 2009 Jacobson
2009/0292743 November 2009 Bigus
2009/0293121 November 2009 Bigus
2009/0296719 December 2009 Maier
2009/0300079 December 2009 Shitomi
2009/0300407 December 2009 Kamath
2009/0300512 December 2009 Ahn
2009/0307333 December 2009 Welingkar
2009/0323632 December 2009 Nix
2010/0005061 January 2010 Basco
2010/0027539 February 2010 Beverly
2010/0046546 February 2010 Ram
2010/0057929 March 2010 Merat
2010/0058346 March 2010 Narang
2010/0088370 April 2010 Wu
2010/0094767 April 2010 Miltonberger
2010/0094876 April 2010 Huang
2010/0098093 April 2010 Ejzak
2010/0100465 April 2010 Cooke
2010/0103870 April 2010 Garcia-Luna-Aceves
2010/0124191 May 2010 Vos
2010/0125911 May 2010 Bhaskaran
2010/0131660 May 2010 Dec
2010/0150155 June 2010 Napierala
2010/0165976 July 2010 Khan
2010/0169478 July 2010 Saha
2010/0169503 July 2010 Kollmansberger
2010/0180332 July 2010 Ben-Yochanan
2010/0182995 July 2010 Hwang
2010/0185753 July 2010 Liu
2010/0195653 August 2010 Jacobson
2010/0195654 August 2010 Jacobson
2010/0195655 August 2010 Jacobson
2010/0217874 August 2010 Anantharaman
2010/0217985 August 2010 Fahrny
2010/0232402 September 2010 Przybysz
2010/0232439 September 2010 Dham
2010/0235516 September 2010 Nakamura
2010/0246549 September 2010 Zhang
2010/0250497 September 2010 Redlich
2010/0250939 September 2010 Adams
2010/0257149 October 2010 Cognigni
2010/0268782 October 2010 Zombek
2010/0272107 October 2010 Papp
2010/0281263 November 2010 Ugawa
2010/0284309 November 2010 Allan
2010/0284404 November 2010 Gopinath
2010/0293293 November 2010 Beser
2010/0322249 December 2010 Thathapudi
2011/0013637 January 2011 Xue
2011/0019674 January 2011 Iovanna
2011/0022812 January 2011 vanderLinden
2011/0029952 February 2011 Harrington
2011/0055392 March 2011 Shen
2011/0055921 March 2011 Narayanaswamy
2011/0060716 March 2011 Forman
2011/0060717 March 2011 Forman
2011/0090908 April 2011 Jacobson
2011/0106755 May 2011 Hao
2011/0131308 June 2011 Eriksson
2011/0137919 June 2011 Ryu
2011/0145597 June 2011 Yamaguchi
2011/0145858 June 2011 Philpott
2011/0149858 June 2011 Hwang
2011/0153840 June 2011 Narayana
2011/0158122 June 2011 Murphy
2011/0161408 June 2011 Kim
2011/0202609 August 2011 Chaturvedi
2011/0219093 September 2011 Ragunathan
2011/0219427 September 2011 Hito
2011/0219727 September 2011 May
2011/0225293 September 2011 Rathod
2011/0231578 September 2011 Nagappan
2011/0239256 September 2011 Gholmieh
2011/0258049 October 2011 Ramer
2011/0264824 October 2011 Venkata Subramanian
2011/0265159 October 2011 Ronda
2011/0265174 October 2011 Thornton
2011/0271007 November 2011 Wang
2011/0280214 November 2011 Lee
2011/0286457 November 2011 Ee
2011/0286459 November 2011 Rembarz
2011/0295783 December 2011 Zhao
2011/0299454 December 2011 Krishnaswamy
2012/0011170 January 2012 Elad
2012/0011551 January 2012 Levy
2012/0023113 January 2012 Ferren
2012/0036180 February 2012 Thornton
2012/0045064 February 2012 Rembarz
2012/0047361 February 2012 Erdmann
2012/0066727 March 2012 Nozoe
2012/0106339 May 2012 Mishra
2012/0110159 May 2012 Richardson
2012/0114313 May 2012 Phillips
2012/0120803 May 2012 Farkas
2012/0127994 May 2012 Ko
2012/0136676 May 2012 Goodall
2012/0136936 May 2012 Quintuna
2012/0136945 May 2012 Lee
2012/0137367 May 2012 Dupont
2012/0141093 June 2012 Yamaguchi
2012/0155464 June 2012 Kim
2012/0158973 June 2012 Jacobson
2012/0163373 June 2012 Lo
2012/0166433 June 2012 Tseng
2012/0170913 July 2012 Isozaki
2012/0179653 July 2012 Araki
2012/0197690 August 2012 Agulnek
2012/0198048 August 2012 Ioffe
2012/0221150 August 2012 Arensmeier
2012/0224487 September 2012 Hui
2012/0226902 September 2012 Kim
2012/0257500 October 2012 Lynch
2012/0284791 November 2012 Miller
2012/0290669 November 2012 Parks
2012/0290919 November 2012 Melnyk
2012/0291102 November 2012 Cohen
2012/0300669 November 2012 Zahavi
2012/0307629 December 2012 Vasseur
2012/0314580 December 2012 Hong
2012/0317307 December 2012 Ravindran
2012/0322422 December 2012 Frecks
2012/0323933 December 2012 He
2012/0331112 December 2012 Chatani
2013/0024560 January 2013 Vasseur
2013/0041982 February 2013 Shi
2013/0051392 February 2013 Filsfils
2013/0054971 February 2013 Yamaguchi
2013/0060962 March 2013 Wang
2013/0061084 March 2013 Barton
2013/0066823 March 2013 Sweeney
2013/0073552 March 2013 Rangwala
2013/0073882 March 2013 Inbaraj
2013/0074155 March 2013 Huh
2013/0090942 April 2013 Robinson
2013/0091539 April 2013 Khurana
2013/0110987 May 2013 Kim
2013/0111063 May 2013 Lee
2013/0128786 May 2013 Sultan
2013/0132719 May 2013 Kobayashi
2013/0139245 May 2013 Thomas
2013/0151584 June 2013 Westphal
2013/0151646 June 2013 Chidambaram
2013/0152070 June 2013 Bhullar
2013/0163426 June 2013 Beliveau
2013/0166668 June 2013 Byun
2013/0173822 July 2013 Hong
2013/0182568 July 2013 Lee
2013/0182931 July 2013 Fan
2013/0185406 July 2013 Choi
2013/0191412 July 2013 Kitamura
2013/0197698 August 2013 Shah
2013/0198119 August 2013 Eberhardt, III
2013/0212185 August 2013 Pasquero
2013/0219038 August 2013 Lee
2013/0219081 August 2013 Qian
2013/0219478 August 2013 Mahamuni
2013/0223237 August 2013 Hui
2013/0227048 August 2013 Xie
2013/0227114 August 2013 Vasseur
2013/0227166 August 2013 Ravindran
2013/0242996 September 2013 Varvello
2013/0250809 September 2013 Hui
2013/0262365 October 2013 Dolbear
2013/0262698 October 2013 Schwan
2013/0282854 October 2013 Jang
2013/0282860 October 2013 Zhang
2013/0282920 October 2013 Zhang
2013/0304758 November 2013 Gruber
2013/0304937 November 2013 Lee
2013/0325888 December 2013 Oneppo
2013/0329696 December 2013 Xu
2013/0332971 December 2013 Fisher
2013/0336103 December 2013 Vasseur
2013/0336323 December 2013 Srinivasan
2013/0339481 December 2013 Hong
2013/0343408 December 2013 Cook
2014/0003232 January 2014 Guichard
2014/0003424 January 2014 Matsuhira
2014/0006354 January 2014 Parkison
2014/0006565 January 2014 Muscariello
2014/0029445 January 2014 Hui
2014/0032714 January 2014 Liu
2014/0033193 January 2014 Palaniappan
2014/0040505 February 2014 Barton
2014/0040628 February 2014 Fort
2014/0043987 February 2014 Watve
2014/0047513 February 2014 vantNoordende
2014/0074730 March 2014 Arensmeier
2014/0075567 March 2014 Raleigh
2014/0082135 March 2014 Jung
2014/0082661 March 2014 Krahnstoever
2014/0089454 March 2014 Jeon
2014/0096249 April 2014 Dupont
2014/0098685 April 2014 Shattil
2014/0108313 April 2014 Heidasch
2014/0108474 April 2014 David
2014/0115037 April 2014 Liu
2014/0122587 May 2014 Petker
2014/0129736 May 2014 Yu
2014/0136814 May 2014 Stark
2014/0140348 May 2014 Perlman
2014/0143370 May 2014 Vilenski
2014/0146819 May 2014 Bae
2014/0149733 May 2014 Kim
2014/0156396 June 2014 deKozan
2014/0165207 June 2014 Engel
2014/0172783 June 2014 Suzuki
2014/0172981 June 2014 Kim
2014/0173034 June 2014 Liu
2014/0173076 June 2014 Ravindran
2014/0181140 June 2014 Kim
2014/0192677 July 2014 Chew
2014/0192717 July 2014 Liu
2014/0195328 July 2014 Ferens
2014/0195641 July 2014 Wang
2014/0195666 July 2014 Dumitriu
2014/0204945 July 2014 Byun
2014/0214942 July 2014 Ozonat
2014/0233575 August 2014 Xie
2014/0237085 August 2014 Park
2014/0237095 August 2014 Bevilacqua-Linn
2014/0245359 August 2014 DeFoy
2014/0254595 September 2014 Luo
2014/0280823 September 2014 Varvello
2014/0281489 September 2014 Peterka
2014/0281505 September 2014 Zhang
2014/0282816 September 2014 Xie
2014/0289325 September 2014 Solis
2014/0289790 September 2014 Wilson
2014/0298248 October 2014 Kang
2014/0314093 October 2014 You
2014/0337276 November 2014 Iordanov
2014/0365550 December 2014 Jang
2015/0006896 January 2015 Franck
2015/0018770 January 2015 Baran
2015/0032892 January 2015 Narayanan
2015/0033365 January 2015 Mellor
2015/0039890 February 2015 Khosravi
2015/0063802 March 2015 Bahadur
2015/0089081 March 2015 Thubert
2015/0095481 April 2015 Ohnishi
2015/0095514 April 2015 Yu
2015/0120663 April 2015 LeScouarnec
2015/0169758 June 2015 Assom
2015/0188770 July 2015 Naiksatam
2015/0195149 July 2015 Vasseur
2015/0207633 July 2015 Ravindran
2015/0207864 July 2015 Wilson
2015/0279348 October 2015 Cao
2015/0288755 October 2015 Mosko
2015/0312300 October 2015 Mosko
2015/0349961 December 2015 Mosko
2015/0372903 December 2015 Hui
2015/0381546 December 2015 Mahadevan
2016/0019275 January 2016 Mosko
2016/0021172 January 2016 Mahadevan
2016/0062840 March 2016 Scott
2016/0110466 April 2016 Uzun
2016/0171184 June 2016 Solis
Foreign Patent Documents
103873371 Jun 2014 CN
1720277 Jun 1967 DE
19620817 Nov 1997 DE
0295727 Dec 1988 EP
0757065 Jul 1996 EP
1077422 Feb 2001 EP
1383265 Jan 2004 EP
1384729 Jan 2004 EP
1473889 Nov 2004 EP
2120402 Nov 2009 EP
2120419 Nov 2009 EP
2120419 Nov 2009 EP
2124415 Nov 2009 EP
2214357 Aug 2010 EP
2299754 Mar 2011 EP
2323346 May 2011 EP
2552083 Jan 2013 EP
2214356 May 2016 EP
03005288 Jan 2003 WO
03042254 May 2003 WO
03049369 Jun 2003 WO
03091297 Nov 2003 WO
2007113180 Oct 2007 WO
2007122620 Nov 2007 WO
2007144388 Dec 2007 WO
2011049890 Apr 2011 WO
2012077073 Jun 2012 WO
2013123410 Aug 2013 WO
2015084327 Jun 2015 WO

Other References

Ao-Jan Su, David R. Choffnes, Aleksandar Kuzmanovic, and Fabian E. Bustamante. Drafting Behind Akamai: Inferring Network Conditions Based on CDN Redirections. IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking {Feb. 2009). cited by applicant .
B. Lynn$2E. cited by applicant .
C. Gentry and A. Silverberg. Hierarchical ID-Based Cryptography. Advances in Cryptology--ASIACRYPT 2002. Springer Berlin Heidelberg (2002). cited by applicant .
D. Boneh, C. Gentry, and B. Waters, 'Collusi. cited by applicant .
D. Boneh and M. Franklin. Identity-Based Encryption from the Weil Pairing. Advances in Cryptology--CRYPTO 2001, vol. 2139, Springer Berlin Heidelberg (2001). cited by applicant .
G. Ateniese, K. Fu, M. Green, and S. Hohenberger. Improved Proxy Reencryption Schemes with Applications to Secure Distributed Storage. In the 12th Annual Network and Distributed System Security Sympo. cited by applicant .
H. Xiong, X. Zhang, W. Zhu, and D. Yao. CloudSeal: End-to$2. cited by applicant .
J. Bethencourt, A, Sahai, and B. Waters, `Ciphertext-policy attribute-based encryption,` in Proc. IEEE Security & Privacy 2007, Berkeley, CA, USA, May 2007, pp. 321-334. cited by applicant .
J. Lotspiech, S. Nusser, and F. Pestoni. Anonymous Trust: Digital Rights Management using Broadcast Encryption. Proceedings of the IEEE 92.6 (2004). cited by applicant .
J. Shao and Z. Cao. CCA-Secure Proxy Re-Encryption without Pairings. Public Key Cryptography. Springer Lecture Notes in Computer ScienceVolume 5443 (2009). cited by applicant .
M. Blaze, G. Bleumer, and M. Strauss, `Divertible protocols and atomic prosy cryptography,` in Proc. Eurocrypt 1998, Espoo, Finland, May-Jun. 1998, pp. 127-144. cited by applicant .
R. H. Deng, J. Weng, S. Liu, and K. Chen. Chosen-Ciphertext Secure Proxy Re-Encryption without Pairings. CANS. Spring Lecture Notes in Computer Science vol. 5339 (2008). cited by applicant .
RTMP (2009). Available online at http://wwwimages.adobe.com/www.adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/devnet/rtmp- / pdf/rtmp specification 1.0.pdf. cited by applicant .
S. Chow, J. Weng, Y. Yang, and R. Deng. Efficient Unidirectional Proxy Re-Encryption. Progress in Cryptology--AFRICACRYPT 2010. Springer Berlin Heidelberg (2010). cited by applicant .
S. Kamara and K. Lauter. Cryptographic Cloud Storage. Financial Cryptography and Data Security. Springer Berlin Heidelberg (2010). cited by applicant .
Sandvine, Global Internet Phenomena Report--Spring 2012. Located online at http://www.sandvine.com/downloads/ documents/Phenomenal H 2012/Sandvine Global Internet Phenomena Report 1H 2012.pdf. cited by applicant .
The Despotify Project (2012). Available online at http://despotify.sourceforge.net/. cited by applicant .
V. K. Adhikari, S. Jain, Y. Chen, and Z.-L. Zhang. Vivisecting Youtube:An Active Measurement Study. In INFOCOM12 Mini-conference (2012). cited by applicant .
Vijay Kumar Adhikari, Yang Guo, Fang Hao, Matteo Varvello, Volker Hilt, Moritz Steiner, and Zhi-Li Zhang. Unreeling Netflix: Understanding and Improving Multi-CDN Movie Delivery. In the Proceedings of IEEE INFOCOM 2012 (2012). cited by applicant .
Jacobson, Van et al. `VoCCN: Voice Over Content-Centric Networks.` Dec. 1, 2009. ACM ReArch'09. cited by applicant .
Rosenberg, J. "Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT) Traversal for Offer/Answer Protocols", Apr. 2010, pp. 1-117. cited by applicant .
Shih, Eugene et al., `Wake on Wireless: An Event Driven Energy Saving Strategy for Battery Operated Devices`, Sep. 23, 2002, pp. 160-171. cited by applicant .
Fall, K. et al., "DTN: an architectural retrospective", Selected areas in communications, IEEE Journal on, vol. 28, No. 5, Jun. 1, 2008, pp. 828-835. cited by applicant .
Gritter, M. et al., `An Architecture for content routing support in the Internet`, Proceedings of 3rd Usenix Symposium on Internet Technologies and Systems, 2001, pp. 37-48. cited by applicant .
"CCNx," http://ccnx.org/. downloaded Mar. 11, 2015. cited by applicant .
"Content Delivery Network", Wikipedia, Dec. 10, 2011, http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Content.sub.--delivery.sub.--ne- twork&oldid=465077460. cited by applicant .
"Digital Signature" archived on Aug. 31, 2009 at http://web.archive.org/web/20090831170721/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Di- gital.sub.--signature. cited by applicant .
"Introducing JSON," http://www.json.org/. downloaded Mar. 11, 2015. cited by applicant .
"Microsoft PlayReady," http://www.microsoft.com/playready/.downloaded Mar. 11, 2015. cited by applicant .
"Pursuing a pub/sub internet (PURSUIT)," http://www.fp7-pursuit.ew/PursuitWeb/. downloaded Mar. 11, 2015. cited by applicant .
"The FP7 4WARD project," http://www.4ward-project.eu/. downloaded Mar. 11, 2015. cited by applicant .
A. Broder and A. Karlin, "Multilevel Adaptive Hashing", Jan. 1990, pp. 43-53. cited by applicant .
Detti, Andrea, et al. "CONET: a content centric inter-networking architecture." Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Information-centric networking. ACM, 2011. cited by applicant .
A. Wolman, M. Voelker, N. Sharma N. Cardwell, A. Karlin, and H.M. Levy, "On the scale and performance of cooperative web proxy caching," ACM SIGHOPS Operating Systems Review, vol. 33, No. 5, pp. 16-31, Dec. 1999. cited by applicant .
Afanasyev, Alexander, et al. "Interest flooding attack and countermeasures in Named Data Networking." IFIP Networking Conference, 2013. IEEE, 2013. cited by applicant .
B. Ahlgren et al., `A Survey of Information-centric Networking` IEEE Commun. Magazine, Jul. 2012, pp. 26-36. cited by applicant .
Bari, MdFaizul, et al. `A survey of naming and routing in information-centric networks.` Communications Magazine, IEEE 50.12 (2012): 44-53. cited by applicant .
Baugher, Mark et al., "Self-Verifying Names for Read-Only Named Data", 2012 IEEE Conference on Computer Communications Workshops (Infocom Wkshps), Mar. 2012, pp. 274-279. cited by applicant .
Brambley, Michael, A novel, low-cost, reduced-sensor approach for providing smart remote monitoring and diagnostics for packaged air conditioners and heat pumps. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, 2009. cited by applicant .
C.A. Wood and E. Uzun, "Flexible end-to-end content security in CCN," in Proc. IEEE CCNC 2014, Las Vegas, CA, USA, Jan. 2014. cited by applicant .
Carzaniga, Antonio, Matthew J. Rutherford, and Alexander L. Wolf. `A routing scheme for content-based networking.` Infocom 2004. Twenty-third Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies. vol. 2. IEEE, 2004. cited by applicant .
Cho, Jin-Hee, Ananthram Swami, and Ray Chen. "A survey on trust management for mobile ad hoc networks." Communications Surveys & Tutorials, IEEE 13.4 (2011): 562-583. cited by applicant .
Compagno, Alberto, et al. "Poseidon: Mitigating interest flooding DDoS attacks in named data networking." Local Computer Networks (LCN), 2013 IEEE 38th Conference on. IEEE, 2013. cited by applicant .
Conner, William, et al. "A trust management framework for service-oriented environments." Proceedings of the 18th international conference on World wide web. ACM, 2009. cited by applicant .
Content Centric Networking Project (CCN) [online], http://ccnx.org/releases/latest/doc/technical/, Downloaded Mar. 9, 2015. cited by applicant .
Content Mediator Architecture for Content-aware Networks (COMET) Project [online], http://www.comet-project.org/, Downloaded Mar. 9, 2015. cited by applicant .
D.K. Smetters, P. Golle, and J.D. Thornton, "CCNx access control specifications," PARC, Tech. Rep., Jul. 2010. cited by applicant .
Dabirmoghaddam, Ali, Maziar Mirzazad Barijough, and J. J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves. `Understanding optimal caching and opportunistic caching at the edge of information-centric networks.` Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Information-centric networking. ACM, 2014. cited by applicant .
Detti et al., "Supporting the Web with an information centric network that routes by name", Aug. 2012, Computer Networks 56, pp. 3705-3702. cited by applicant .
Dijkstra, Edsger W., and Carel S. Scholten. `Termination detection for diffusing computations.` Information Processing Letters 11.1 (1980): 1-4. cited by applicant .
Dijkstra, Edsger W., Wim Hj Feijen, and A.sub.--J M. Van Gasteren. "Derivation of a termination detection algorithm for distributed computations." Control Flow and Data Flow: concepts of distributed programming. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1986. 507-512. cited by applicant .
E. Rescorla and N. Modadugu, "Datagram transport layer security," IETF RFC 4347, Apr. 2006. cited by applicant .
E.W. Dijkstra, W. Feijen, and A.J.M. Van Gasteren, "Derivation of a Termination Detection Algorithm for Distributed Computations," Information Processing Letter, vol. 16, No. 5, 1983. cited by applicant .
Fayazbakhsh, S. K., Lin, Y., Tootoonchian, A., Ghodsi, A., Koponen, T., Maggs, B., & Shenker, S. {Aug. 2013). Less pain, most of the gain: Incrementally deployable ICN. In ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review (vol. 43, No. 4, pp. 147-158). ACM. cited by applicant .
G. Tyson, S. Kaune, S. Miles, Y. El-Khatib, A. Mauthe, and A. Taweel, "A trace-driven analysis of caching in content-centric networks," in Proc. IEEE ICCCN 2012, Munich, Germany, Jul.-Aug. 2012, pp. 1-7. cited by applicant .
G. Wang, Q. Liu, and J. Wu, "Hierarchical attribute-based encryption for fine-grained access control in cloud storage services," in Proc. ACM CCS 2010, Chicago, IL, USA, Oct. 2010, pp. 735-737. cited by applicant .
G. Xylomenos et al., "A Survey of Information-centric Networking Research," IEEE Communication Surveys and Tutorials, Jul. 2013. cited by applicant .
Garcia, Humberto E., Wen-Chiao Lin, and Semyon M. Meerkov. "A resilient condition assessment monitoring system." Resilient Control Systems (ISRCS), 2012 5th International Symposium on. IEEE, 2012. cited by applicant .
Garcia-Luna-Aceves, Jose J. `A unified approach to loop-free routing using distance vectors or link states.` ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review. vol. 19. No. 4. ACM, 1989. cited by applicant .
Garcia-Luna-Aceves, Jose J. `Name-Based Content Routing in Information Centric Networks Using Distance Information` Proc ACM ICN 2014, Sep. 2014. cited by applicant .
Ghali, Cesar, GeneTsudik, and Ersin Uzun. "Needle in a Haystack: Mitigating Content Poisoning in Named-Data Networking." Proceedings of NDSS Workshop on Security of Emerging Networking Technologies (SENT). 2014. cited by applicant .
Ghodsi, Ali, et al. "Information-centric networking: seeing the forest for the trees." Proceedings of the 10th ACM Workshop on Hot Topics in Networks. ACM, 2011. cited by applicant .
Ghodsi, Ali, et al. "Naming in content-oriented architectures." Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Information-centric networking. ACM, 2011. cited by applicant .
Gupta, Anjali, Barbara Liskov, and Rodrigo Rodrigues. "Efficient Routing for Peer-to-Peer Overlays." NSDI. vol. 4. 2004. cited by applicant .
Heckerman, David, John S. Breese, and Koos Rommelse. "Decision-Theoretic Troubleshooting." Communications of the ACM. 1995. cited by applicant .
Heinemeier, Kristin, et al. "Uncertainties in Achieving Energy Savings from HVAC Maintenance Measures in the Field." ASHRAE Transactions 118.Part 2 {2012). cited by applicant .
Herlich, Matthias et al., "Optimizing Energy Efficiency for Bulk Transfer Networks", Apr. 13, 2010, pp. 1-3, retrieved for the Internet: URL:http://www.cs.uni-paderborn.de/fileadmin/informationik/ag-karl/public- ations/miscellaneous/optimizing.pdf (retrieved on Mar. 9, 2012). cited by applicant .
Hogue et al., `NLSR: Named-data Link State Routing Protocol`, Aug. 12, 2013, ICN 2013, pp. 15-20. cited by applicant .
https://code.google.com/p/ccnx-trace/. cited by applicant .
I. Psaras, R.G. Clegg, R. Landa, W.K. Chai, and G. Pavlou, "Modelling and evaluation of CCN-caching trees," in Proc. IFIP Networking 2011, Valencia, Spain, May 2011, pp. 78-91. cited by applicant .
Intanagonwiwat, Chalermek, Ramesh Govindan, and Deborah Estrin. `Directed diffusion: a scalable and robust communication paradigm for sensor networks.` Proceedings of the 6th annual international conference on Mobile computing and networking. ACM, 2000. cited by applicant .
J. Aumasson and D. Bernstein, "SipHash: a fast short-input PRF", Sep. 18, 2012. cited by applicant .
J. Hur, "Improving security and efficiency in attribute-based data sharing," IEEE Trans. Knowledge Data Eng., vol. 25, No. 10, pp. 2271-2282, Oct. 2013. cited by applicant .
V. Jacobson et al., `Networking Named Content,` Proc. IEEE CoNEXT '09, Dec. 2009. cited by applicant .
Jacobson, Van et al., "Content-Centric Networking, Whitepaper Describing Future Assurable Global Networks", Palo Alto Research Center, Inc., Jan. 30, 2007, pp. 1-9. cited by applicant .
Jacobson et al., "Custodian-Based Information Sharing," Jul. 2012, IEEE Communications Magazine: vol. 50 Issue 7 (p. 3843). cited by applicant .
Ji, Kun, et al. "Prognostics enabled resilient control for model-based building automation systems." Proceedings of the 12th Conference of International Building Performance Simulation Association. 2011. cited by applicant .
K. Liang, L. Fang, W. Susilo, and D.S. Wong, "A Ciphertext-policy attribute-based proxy re-encryption with chosen-ciphertext security," in Proc. INCoS 2013, Xian, China, Sep. 2013, pp. 552-559. cited by applicant .
Katipamula, Srinivas, and Michael R. Brambley. "Review article: methods for fault detection, diagnostics, and prognostics for building systemsa review, Part I." HVAC&R Research 11.1 (2005): 3-25. cited by applicant .
Katipamula, Srinivas, and Michael R. Brambley. "Review article: methods for fault detection, diagnostics, and prognostics for building systemsa review, Part II." HVAC&R Research 11.2 (2005): 169-187. cited by applicant .
Koponen, Teemu et al., "A Data-Oriented (and Beyond) Network Architecture", SIGCOMM '07, Aug. 27-31, 2007, Kyoto, Japan, XP-002579021, p. 181-192. cited by applicant .
L. Wang et al., `OSPFN: An OSPF Based Routing Protocol for Named Data Networking,` Technical Report NDN-0003, 2012. cited by applicant .
L. Zhou, V. Varadharajan, and M. Hitchens, "Achieving secure role-based access control on encrypted data in cloud storage," IEEE Trans. Inf. Forensics Security, vol. 8, No. 12, pp. 1947-1960, Dec. 2013. cited by applicant .
Li, Wenjia, Anupam Joshi, and Tim Finin. "Coping with node misbehaviors in ad hoc networks: a multi-dimensional trust management approach." Mobile Data Management (MDM), 2010 Eleventh International Conference on. IEEE, 2010. cited by applicant .
Lopez, Javier, et al. "Trust management systems for wireless sensor networks: Best practices." Computer Communications 33.9 (2010): 1086-1093. cited by applicant .
M. Green and G. Ateniese, "Identity-based proxy re-encryption," in Proc. ACNS 2007, Zhuhai, China, Jun. 2007, pp. 288-306. cited by applicant .
M. Ion, J. Zhang, and E.M. Schooler, "Toward content-centric privacy in ICN: Attribute-based encryption and routing," in Proc. ACM SIGCOMM ICN 2013, Hong Kong, China, Aug. 2013, pp. 39-40. cited by applicant .
M. Naor and B. Pinkas "Efficient trace and revoke schemes," in Proc. FC 2000, Anguilla, British West Indies, Feb. 2000, pp. 1-20. cited by applicant .
M. Nystrom, S. Parkinson, A. Rusch, and M. Scott, "Pkcs#12: Personal information exchange syntax v. 1.1," IETF RFC 7292, K. Moriarty, Ed., Jul 2014. cited by applicant .
M. Parsa and J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves, "A Protocol for Scalable Loop-free Multicast Routing." IEEE JSAC, Apr. 1997. cited by applicant .
M. Walfish, H. Balakrishnan, and S. Shenker, "Untangling the web from DNS," in Proc. USENIX NSDI 2004, Oct. 2010, pp. 735-737. cited by applicant .
Mahadevan, Priya, et al. "Orbis: rescaling degree correlations to generate annotated internet topologies." ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review. vol. 37. No. 4. ACM, 2007. cited by applicant .
Mahadevan, Priya, et al. "Systematic topology analysis and generation using degree correlations." ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review. vol. 36. No. 4. ACM, 2006. cited by applicant .
Matocha, Jeff, and Tracy Camp. `A taxonomy of distributed termination detection algorithms.` Journal of Systems and Software 43.3 (1998): 207-221. cited by applicant .
Matted Varvello et al., "Caesar: A Content Router for High Speed Forwarding", ICN 2012, Second Edition on Information-Centric Networking, New York, Aug. 2012. cited by applicant .
McWilliams, Jennifer A., and Iain S. Walker. "Home Energy Article: A Systems Approach to Retrofitting Residential HVAC Systems." Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (2005). cited by applicant .
Merindol et al., "An efficient algorithm to enable path diversity in link state routing networks", Jan. 2010, Computer Networks 55 (2011), pp. 1132-1140. cited by applicant .
Mobility First Project [online], http://mobilityfirst.winlab.rutgers.edu/, Downloaded Mar. 9, 2015. cited by applicant .
Narasimhan, Sriram, and Lee Brownston. "HyDE-A General Framework for Stochastic and Hybrid Modelbased Diagnosis." Proc. DX 7 (2007): 162-169. cited by applicant .
NDN Project [online], http://www.named-data.net/, Downloaded Mar. 9, 2015. cited by applicant .
Omar, Mawloud, Yacine Challal, and Abdelmadjid Bouabdallah. "Certification-based trust models in mobile ad hoc networks: A survey and taxonomy." Journal of Network and Computer Applications 35.1 (2012): 268-286. cited by applicant .
P. Mahadevan, E.Uzun, S. Sevilla, and J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves, "CCN-krs: A key resolution service for ccn," in Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Information-centric Networking, Ser. INC 14 New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2014, pp. 97-106. [Online]. Available: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2660129.2660154. cited by applicant .
S. Deering, "Multicast Routing in Internetworks and Extended LANs," Proc. ACM SIGCOMM '88, Aug. 1988. cited by applicant .
S. Deering et al., "The PIM architecture for wide-area multicast routing," IEEE/ ACM Trans, on Networking, vol. 4, No. 2, Apr. 1996. cited by applicant .
S. Jahid, P. Mittal, and N. Borisov, "EASiER: Encryption-based access control in social network with efficient revocation," in Proc. ACM ASIACCS 2011, Hong Kong, China, Mar. 2011, pp. 411-415. cited by applicant .
S. Kamara and K. Lauter, "Cryptographic cloud storage," in Proc. FC 2010, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain, Jan. 2010, pp. 136-149. cited by applicant .
S. Kumar et al. "Peacock Hashing: Deterministic and Updatable Hashing for High Performance Networking," 2008, pp. 556-564. cited by applicant .
S. Misra, R. Tourani, and N.E. Majd, "Secure content delivery in information-centric networks: Design, implementation, and analyses," in Proc. ACM SIGCOMM ICN 2013, Hong Kong, China, Aug. 2013, pp. 73-78. cited by applicant .
S. Yu, C. Wang, K. Ren, and W. Lou, "Achieving secure, scalable, and fine-grained data access control in cloud computing," in Proc. IEEE INFOCOM 2010, San Diego, CA, USA, Mar. 2010, pp. 1-9. cited by applicant .
S.J. Lee, M. Gerla, and C. Chiang, "On-demand Multicast Routing Protocol in Multihop Wireless Mobile Networks," Mobile Networks and Applications, vol. 7, No. 6, 2002. cited by applicant .
Scalable and Adaptive Internet Solutions (SAIL) Project [online], http://sailproject.eu/ Downloaded Mar. 8, 2015. cited by applicant .
Schein, Jeffrey, and Steven T. Bushby. A Simulation Study of a Hierarchical, Rule-Based Method for System-Level Fault Detection and Diagnostics in HVAC Systems. US Department of Commerce,[Technology Administration], National Institute of Standards and Technology, 2005. cited by applicant .
Shani, Guy, Joelle Pineau, and Robert Kaplow. "A survey of point-based POMDP solvers." Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems 27.1 (2013): 1-51. cited by applicant .
Sheppard, John W., and Stephyn GW Butcher. "A formal analysis of fault diagnosis with d-matrices." Journal of Electronic Testing 23.4 (2007): 309-322. cited by applicant .
Shneyderman, Alex et al., `Mobile VPN: Delivering Advanced Services in Next Generation Wireless Systems`, Jan. 1, 2003, pp. 3-29. cited by applicant .
Solis, Ignacio, and J. J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves. `Robust content dissemination in disrupted environments.` proceedings of the third ACM workshop on Challenged networks. ACM, 2008. cited by applicant .
Sun, Ying, and Daniel S. Weld. "A framework for model-based repair." AAAI. 1993. cited by applicant .
T. Ballardie, P. Francis, and J. Crowcroft, "Core Based Trees (CBT)," Proc. ACM SIGCOMM '88, Aug. 1988. cited by applicant .
T. Dierts, "The transport layer security (TLS) protocol version 1.2," IETF RFC 5246, 2008. cited by applicant .
T. Koponen, M. Chawla, B.-G. Chun, A. Ermolinskiy, K.H. Kim, S. Shenker, and I. Stoica, `A data-oriented (and beyond) network architecture,` ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review, vol. 37, No. 4, pp. 181-192, Oct. 2007. cited by applicant .
V. Goyal, 0. Pandey, A. Sahai, and B. Waters, "Attribute-based encryption for fine-grained access control of encrypted data," in Proc. ACM CCS 2006, Alexandria, VA, USA, Oct.-Nov. 2006, pp. 89-98. cited by applicant .
V. Jacobson, D.K. Smetters, J.D. Thornton, M.F. Plass, N.H. Briggs, and R.L. Braynard, `Networking named content,` in Proc. ACM CoNEXT 2009, Rome, Italy, Dec. 2009, pp. 1-12. cited by applicant .
Verma, Vandi, Joquin Fernandez, and Reid Simmons. "Probabilistic models for monitoring and fault diagnosis." The Second IARP and IEEE/RAS Joint Workshop on Technical Challenges for Dependable Robots in Human Environments. Ed. Raja Chatila. Oct. 2002. cited by applicant .
Vutukury, Srinivas, and J. J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves. A simple approximation to minimum-delay routing. vol. 29. No. 4. ACM, 1999. cited by applicant .
W.-G. Tzeng and Z.-J. Tzeng, "A public-key traitor tracing scheme with revocation using dynamic shares," in Proc. PKC 2001, Cheju Island, Korea, Feb. 2001, pp. 207-224. cited by applicant .
Waldvogel, Marcel "Fast Longest Prefix Matching: Algorithms, Analysis, and Applications", A dissertation submitted to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, 2002. cited by applicant .
Walker, Iain S. Best practices guide for residential HVAC Retrofits. No. LBNL-53592. Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (US), 2003. cited by applicant .
Wang, Jiangzhe et al., "DMND: Collecting Data from Mobiles Using Named Data", Vehicular Networking Conference, 2010 IEEE, pp. 49-56. cited by applicant .
Xylomenos, George, et al. "A survey of information-centric networking research." Communications Surveys & Tutorials, IEEE 16.2 (2014): 1024-1049. cited by applicant .
Yi, Cheng, et al. `A case for stateful forwarding plane.` Computer Communications 36.7 (2013): 779-791. cited by applicant .
Yi, Cheng, et al. `Adaptive forwarding in named data networking.` ACM SIGCOMM computer communication review 42.3 (2012): 62-67. cited by applicant .
Zahariadis, Theodore, et al. "Trust management in wireless sensor networks." European Transactions on Telecommunications 21.4 (2010): 386-395. cited by applicant .
Zhang, et al., "Named Data Networking (NDN) Project", http://www.parc.com/publication/2709/named-data-networking-ndn-project.ht- ml, Oct. 2010, NDN-0001, Parc Tech Report. cited by applicant .
Zhang, Lixia, et al. `Named data networking.` ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review 44.3 {2014): 66-73. cited by applicant .
Soh et al., "Efficient Prefix Updates for IP Router Using Lexicographic Ordering and Updateable Address Set", Jan. 2008, IEEE Transactions on Computers, vol. 57, No. 1. cited by applicant .
Beben et al., "Content Aware Network based on Virtual Infrastructure", 2012 13th ACIS International Conference on Software Engineering. cited by applicant .
Biradar et al., "Review of multicast routing mechanisms in mobile ad hoc networks", Aug. 16, Journal of Network$. cited by applicant .
D. Trossen and G. Parisis, "Designing and realizing and information-centric Internet," IEEE Communications Magazing, vol. 50, No. 7, pp. 60-67, Jul. 2012. cited by applicant .
Garcia-Luna-Aceves et al., "Automatic Routing Using Multiple Prefix Labels", 2012, IEEE, Ad Hoc and Sensor Networking Symposium. cited by applicant .
Gasti, Paolo et al., 'DoS & DDoS in Named Data Networking', 2013 22nd International Conference on Computer Communications and Networks (ICCCN), Aug. 2013, pp. 1-7. cited by applicant .
Ishiyama, "On the Effectiveness of Diffusive Content Caching in Content-Centric Networking", Nov. 5, 2012, IEEE, Information and Telecommunication Technologies (APSITT), 2012 9th Asia-Pacific Symposium. cited by applicant .
J. Hur and D.K. Noh, "Attribute-based access control with efficient revocation in data outsourcing systers," IEEE Trans. Parallel Distrib. Syst, vol. 22, No. 7, pp. 1214-1221, Jul. 2011. cited by applicant .
Kaya et al., "A Low Power Lookup Technique for Multi-Hashing Network Applications", 2006 IEEE Computer Society Annual Symposium on Emerging VLSI Technologies and Architectures, Mar. 2006. cited by applicant .
Hogue et al., "NLSR: Named-data Link State Routing Protocol", Aug. 12,2013, ICN'13. cited by applicant .
Nadeem Javaid, "Analysis and design of quality link metrics for routing protocols in Wireless Networks", PhD Thesis Defense, Dec. 15, 2010, Universete Paris-Est. cited by applicant .
Wetherall, David, "Active Network vision and reality: Lessons form a capsule-based system", ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles, Dec. 1, 1999. pp. 64-79. cited by applicant .
Wetherell, David, "Active Network vision and reality: Lessons form a capsule-based system", ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles, Dec. 1, 1999. pp. 64-79. cited by applicant .
Kulkarni A.B. et al., "Implementation of a prototype active network", IEEE, Open Architectures and Network Programming, Apr. 3, 1998, pp. 130-142. cited by applicant .
Xie et al. "Collaborative Forwarding and Caching in Content Centric Networks", Networking 2012. cited by applicant .
Lui et al. (A TLV-Structured Data Naming Scheme for Content-Oriented Networking, pp. 5822-5827, International Workshop on the Network of the Future, Communications (ICC), 2012 IEEE International Conference on Jun. 10-15, 2012). cited by applicant .
Peter Dely et al. "OpenFlow for Wireless Mesh Networks" Computer Communications and Networks, 2011 Proceedings of 20th International Conference on, IEEE, Jul. 31, 2011 (Jul. 31, 2011), pp. 1-6. cited by applicant .
Garnepudi Parimala et al "Proactive, reactive and hybrid multicast routing protocols for Wireless Mesh Networks", 2013 IEEE International Conference on Computational Intelligence and Computing Research, IEEE, Dec. 26, 2013, pp. 1-7. cited by applicant .
Tiancheng Zhuang et al. "Managing Ad Hoc Networks of Smartphones", International Journal of Information and Education Technology, Oct. 1, 2013. cited by applicant .
Amadeo et al. "Design and Analysis of a Transport-Level Solution for Content-Centric Centric VANETs", University "Mediterranea" of Reggio Calabria, Jun. 15, 2013. cited by applicant .
Marc Mosko: "CCNx 1.0 Protocol Introduction" Apr. 2, 2014 [Retrieved from the Internet Jun. 8, 2016] http://www.ccnx.org/pubs/hhg/1.1%20CCNx%201.0%Protocol%Introduction.pdf *paragraphs [01.3], [002], [02.1], [0003]. cited by applicant .
Akash Baid et al: "Comparing alternative approaches for networking of named objects in the future Internet", Computer Communications Workshops (Infocom Wkshps), 2012 IEEE Conference on, IEEE, Mar. 25, 2012, pp. 298-303, *Paragraph [002]* *figure 1*. cited by applicant .
Priya Mahadevan: "CCNx 1.0 Tutorial", Mar. 16, 2014, pp. 1-11, Retrieved from the Internet: http://www.ccnx.org/pubs/hhg/1.2%2OCCNx%201.0%20Tutorial.pdf [retrieved on Jun. 8, 2016] *paragraphs [003]-[006], [0011], [0013]* figures 1,2*. cited by applicant .
Marc Mosko et al "All-In-One Streams for Content Centric Networks", May 24, 2015, retrieved from the Internet: http://www.ccnx.org/pubs/AllinOne.pdf [downloaded Jun. 9, 2016] *the whole document*. cited by applicant .
Cesar Ghali et al. "Elements of Trust in Named-Data Networking", Feb. 13, 2014 Retrieved from the internet Jun. 17, 2016 http://arxiv.org/pdf/1402.3332v5.pdf *p. 5, col. 1* *p. 2, col. 1-2* * Section 4.1; p. 4, col. 2* *Section 4.2; p. 4, col. 2*. cited by applicant .
Priya Mahadevan et al. "CCN-KRS", Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Information-Centric Networking, Inc. '14, Sep. 24, 2014. cited by applicant .
Flavio Roberto Santos Et al. "Funnel: Choking Polluters in BitTorrent File Sharing Communities", IEEE Transactions on Network and Service Management, IEEE vol. 8, No. 4, Dec. 1, 2011. cited by applicant .
Liu Wai-Xi et al: "Multisource Dissemination in content-centric networking", 2013 Fourth International conference on the network of the future (NOF), IEEE, Oct. 23, 2013, pp. 1-5. cited by applicant .
Marie-Jose Montpetit et al.: "Network coding meets information-centric networking", Proceedings of the 1st ACM workshop on emerging Name-Oriented mobile networking design, architecture, algorithms, and applications, NOM '12, Jun. 11, 2012, pp. 31-36. cited by applicant .
Asokan et al.: "Server-Supported Signatures", Computer Security Esorics 96, Sep. 25, 1996, pp. 131-143, Section 3. cited by applicant .
Mandl et al.: "A Fast FPGA Based Coprocessor Supporting Hard Real-Time Search", New Frontiers of Information Technology, Proceedings of the 23rd Euromicro Conference Budapest, Sep. 1, 1997, pp. 499-506 *The Whole Document*. cited by applicant .
Sun et al.: "Content-Based Route Lookup Using CAMs", Global Communications Conference, IEEE, Dec. 3, 2012 *The Whole Document*. cited by applicant.

Primary Examiner: Brown; Anthony
Assistant Examiner: Ambaye; Samuel
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Patent Capital Group

Claims



What is claimed is:

1. A computer-executable method for retrieving a content collection that includes a plurality of content objects over a content-centric network, the method comprising: determining, by a computer, content-access information that is needed to consume the content collection; generating a plurality of interest packets, which include at least a first interest packet for a catalog of the content collection, a second interest packet for a content object within the content collection, and a third interest packet for the content-access information, wherein the catalog of the content collection includes an ordered list identifying the plurality of content objects within the content collection; and forwarding, concurrently, the plurality of interest packets comprising the first interest packet for the catalog, the second interest packet for the content object, and the third interest packet for the content-access information over the content-centric network to facilitate parallel retrieval of the content collection, the catalog of the content collection, and the content-access information.

2. The method of claim 1, wherein the content-access information includes one or more of: authentication and/or decryption information associated with the catalog; authentication and/or decryption information associated with the content collection; and authentication revocation information.

3. The method of claim 1, further comprising generating an interest packet for the content collection by including, in the generated interest packet, one or more of: user credential information and payment information.

4. The method of claim 1, wherein concurrently forwarding the interest packets involves: forwarding at least one interest packet for the content-access information to a trust authority.

5. The method of claim 1, wherein the interest packets are content-centric networking (CCN) Interests, and wherein a respective CCN Interest specifies a name prefix.

6. The method of claim 1, further comprising: receiving responses to the plurality of interest packets; and caching the received responses.

7. A non-transitory computer-readable storage medium storing instructions that when executed by a computing device cause the computing device to perform a method for retrieving a content collection that includes a plurality of content objects over a content-centric network, the method comprising: determining, by a computer, content-access information that is needed to consume the content collection; generating a plurality of interest packets, which include at least a first interest packet for a catalog of the content collection, a second interest packet for a content object within the content collection, and a third interest packet for the content-access information, wherein the catalog of the content collection includes an ordered list identifying the plurality of content objects within the content collection; and forwarding, concurrently, the plurality of interest packets comprising the first interest packet for the catalog, the second interest packet for the content object, and the third interest packet for the content-access information over the content-centric network to facilitate parallel retrieval of the content collection, the catalog of the content collection, and the content-access information.

8. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 7, wherein the content-access information includes one or more of: authentication and/or decryption information associated with the catalog; authentication and/or decryption information associated with the content collection; and authentication revocation information.

9. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 7, wherein the method further comprises generating an interest packet for the content collection by including in the generated interest packet one or more of: user credential information and payment information.

10. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 7, wherein concurrently forwarding the interest packets involves: forwarding at least one interest packet for the content-access information to a trust authority.

11. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 7, wherein the interest packets are content-centric networking (CCN) Interests, and wherein a respective CCN Interest specifies a name prefix.

12. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 7, wherein the method further comprises: receiving responses to the plurality of interest packets; and caching the received responses.

13. A computer system for retrieving a content collection that includes a plurality of content objects over a content-centric network, the system comprising: a processor; and a storage device coupled to the processor and storing instructions which when executed by the processor cause the processor to perform a method, the method comprising: determining, by a computer, content-access information needed to consume the content collection; generating a plurality of interest packets, which include at least a first interest packet for a catalog of the content collection, a second interest packet for a content object within the content collection, and a third interest packet for the content-access information, wherein the catalog of the content collection includes an ordered list identifying the plurality of content objects within the content collection; and forwarding, concurrently, the plurality of interest packets comprising the first interest packet for the catalog, the second interest packet for the content object, and the third interest packet for the content-access information over the content-centric network to facilitate parallel retrieval of the content collection, the catalog of the content collection, and the content-access information.

14. The computer system of claim 13, wherein the content-access information includes one or more of: authentication and/or decryption information associated with the catalog; authentication and/or decryption information associated with the content collection; and authentication revocation information.

15. The computer system of claim 13, wherein the method further comprises generating an interest packet for the content collection by including in the generated interest packet one or more of: user credential information and payment information.

16. The computer system of claim 13, wherein concurrently forwarding the interest packets involves: forwarding at least one interest packet for the content-access information to a trust authority.

17. The computer system of claim 13, wherein the interest packets are content-centric networking (CCN) Interests, and wherein a respective CCN Interest specifies a name prefix.

18. The computer system of claim 13, wherein the method further comprises: receiving responses to the plurality of interest packets; and caching the received responses.

19. The method of claim 1, wherein concurrently forwarding the interest packets involves forwarding at least one interest packet for a content object within the content collection.

20. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 7, wherein concurrently forwarding the interest packets involves forwarding at least one interest packet for a content object within the content collection.

21. The computer system of claim 13, wherein concurrently forwarding the interest packets involves forwarding at least one interest packet for a content object within the content collection.
Description



BACKGROUND

Field

The present disclosure relates generally to a content-centric network (CCN). More specifically, the present disclosure relates to a system and method for parallel and secure retrieval of content along with information needed for consumption of the content in content-centric networks (CCNs).

Related Art

The proliferation of the Internet and e-commerce continues to fuel revolutionary changes in the network industry. Today, a significant number of information exchanges, from online movie viewing to daily news delivery, retail sales, and instant messaging, are conducted online. An increasing number of Internet applications are also becoming mobile. However, the current Internet operates on a largely location-based addressing scheme. The two most ubiquitous protocols, the Internet Protocol (IP) and Ethernet protocol, are both based on end-host addresses. That is, a consumer of content can only receive the content by explicitly requesting the content from an address (e.g., IP address or Ethernet media access control (MAC) address) that is typically associated with a physical object or location. This restrictive addressing scheme is becoming progressively more inadequate for meeting the ever-changing network demands.

Recently, information-centric network (ICN) architectures have been proposed in the industry where content is directly named and addressed. Content-centric Networking (CCN), an exemplary ICN architecture, brings a new approach to content transport. Instead of having network traffic viewed at the application level as end-to-end conversations over which content travels, content is requested or returned based on its unique name, and the network is responsible for routing content from the provider to the consumer. Note that content includes data that can be transported in the communication system, including any form of data such as text, images, video, and/or audio. A consumer and a provider can be a person at a computer or an automated process inside or outside the CCN. A piece of content can refer to the entire content or a respective portion of the content. For example, a newspaper article might be represented by multiple pieces of content embodied as data packets. A piece of content can also be associated with metadata describing or augmenting the piece of content with information such as authentication data, creation date, content owner, etc.

In CCN, content objects are signed and potentially encrypted. In order to authenticate and access the content of a file, the content consumer may need to retrieve a number of Content Objects and additionally information about the encryption keys and identities of the publisher. Sequential downloading of each Content Object and the additional key information may need multiple round trips to complete. Hence, before a content consumer can start the consumption of a content piece (which may span multiple Content Objects), the content consumer needs to download the metadata, which sometimes is attached to the end of all consumable content. This means that the content consumer may have to wait until all portions of the content are downloaded to download the decryption key, and hence cannot start consuming the already downloaded content portions.

SUMMARY

One embodiment of the present invention provides a system for retrieving a content collection over a network. During operation, the system determines additional information associated with the piece of content that is needed for consumption of the content collection; generates a plurality of Interests, which includes at least one Interest for a catalog of the content collection and at least one Interest for the additional information; and forwards, concurrently, the plurality of Interests, thereby facilitating parallel retrieval of the content collection and the additional information.

In a variation on this embodiment, the additional information includes one or more of: authentication and/or decryption information associated with the catalog, authentication and/or decryption information associated with the content collection, and authentication revocation information.

In a variation on this embodiment, the plurality of Interests includes at least one Interest for the content collection.

In a further variation, generating the at least one Interest for the content collection involves including one or more of: user credential information and payment information.

In a variation on this embodiment, forwarding the Interests involves at least one of: forwarding one or more Interests to a trust authority and forwarding one or more Interests to a node that caches the content collection.

In a variation on this embodiment, the network is a content-centric network, and the Interests are CCN Interests.

In a variation on this embodiment, the system further receives responses to the plurality of Interests and caches the received responses.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

FIG. 1 illustrates an exemplary architecture of a network, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 2 presents a diagram illustrating the format of a manifest, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 3 presents a diagram illustrating an exemplary Content Object in content-centric networks.

FIG. 4 provides a diagram illustrating a conventional content-downloading process.

FIG. 5 presents a diagram illustrating an exemplary process of downloading a content collection, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 6 presents a diagram illustrating an exemplary architecture of an all-at-once content-requesting module, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 7 presents a diagram illustrating an exemplary process of requesting content, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 8 illustrates an exemplary system for parallel content retrieval, in accordance with an embodiment.

In the figures, like reference numerals refer to the same figure elements.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Overview

Embodiments of the present invention provide a system and method for parallel retrieval of content and information needed for consumption of the content. More specifically, during operation, when a requester requests a named piece of content (such as a file) over the network, the system determines what kinds of information is needed to consume the content, and retrieves the piece of content and the needed information in parallel. In other words, the process of retrieving the authentication and decryption information is bootstrapped to the content-downloading process.

In general, CCN uses two types of messages: Interests and Content Objects. An Interest carries the hierarchically structured variable-length identifier (HSVLI), also called the "name," of a Content Object and serves as a request for that object. If a network element (e.g., router) receives multiple Interests for the same name, it may aggregate those Interests. A network element along the path of the Interest with a matching Content Object may cache and return that object, satisfying the Interest. The Content Object follows the reverse path of the Interest to the origin(s) of the Interest. A Content Object contains, among other information, the same HSVLI, the object's payload, and cryptographic information used to bind the HSVLI to the payload.

The terms used in the present disclosure are generally defined as follows (but their interpretation is not limited to such): "HSVLI:" Hierarchically structured variable-length identifier, also called a Name. It is an ordered list of Name Components, which may be variable length octet strings. In human-readable form, it can be represented in a format such as ccnx:/path/part. Also the HSVLI may not be human-readable. As mentioned above, HSVLIs refer to content, and it is desirable that they be able to represent organizational structures for content and be at least partially meaningful to humans. An individual component of an HSVLI may have an arbitrary length. Furthermore, HSVLIs can have explicitly delimited components, can include any sequence of bytes, and are not limited to human-readable characters. A longest-prefix-match lookup is important in forwarding packets with HSVLIs. For example, an HSVLI indicating an Interest in "/parc/home/bob" will match both "/parc/home/bob/test.txt" and "/parc/home/bob/bar.txt." The longest match, in terms of the number of name components, is considered the best because it is the most specific. Detailed descriptions of the HSVLIs can be found in U.S. Pat. No. 8,160,069, entitled "SYSTEM FOR FORWARDING A PACKET WITH A HIERARCHICALLY STRUCTURED VARIABLE-LENGTH IDENTIFIER," by inventors Van L. Jacobson and James D. Thornton, filed 23 Sep. 2009, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. "Interest:" A request for a Content Object. The Interest specifies an HSVLI name prefix and other optional selectors that can be used to choose among multiple objects with the same name prefix. Any Content Object whose name matches the Interest name prefix (and optionally other requested parameters such as publisher key-ID match) satisfies the Interest. "Content Object:" A data object sent in response to an Interest. It has an HSVLI name and a Content payload that are bound together via a cryptographic signature. Optionally, all Content Objects have an implicit terminal name component made up of the SHA-256 digest of the Content Object. In one embodiment, the implicit digest is not transferred on the wire, but is computed at each hop, if needed. Note that the Content Object is not the same as a content component. A Content Object has a specifically defined structure under CCN protocol and its size is normally the size of a network packet (around 1500 bytes for wide area networks and 8000 bytes for local area networks and with fragmentation), whereas a content component is a general term used to refer to a file of any type, which can be an embedded object of a webpage. For example, a webpage may include a number of embedded objects, such as images, video files, or interactive components. Each embedded object is a content component and may span multiple Content Objects.

As mentioned before, an HSVLI indicates a piece of content, is hierarchically structured, and includes contiguous components ordered from a most general level to a most specific level. The length of a respective HSVLI is not fixed. In content-centric networks, unlike a conventional IP network, a packet may be identified by an HSVLI. For example, "abcd/bob/papers/ccn/news" could be the name of the content and identifies the corresponding packet(s), i.e., the "news" article from the "ccn" collection of papers for a user named "Bob" at the organization named "ABCD." To request a piece of content, a node expresses (e.g., broadcasts) an Interest in that content by the content's name. An Interest in a piece of content can be a query for the content according to the content's name or identifier. The content, if available in the network, is sent back from any node that stores the content to the requesting node. The routing infrastructure intelligently propagates the Interest to the prospective nodes that are likely to have the information and then carries available content back along the reverse path traversed by the Interest message. Essentially the Content Object follows the breadcrumbs left by the Interest message and thus reaches the requesting node.

FIG. 1 illustrates an exemplary architecture of a network, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention. In this example, a network 180 comprises nodes 100-145. Each node in the network is coupled to one or more other nodes. Network connection 185 is an example of such a connection. The network connection is shown as a solid line, but each line could also represent sub-networks or super-networks, which can couple one node to another node. Network 180 can be content-centric, a local network, a super-network, or a sub-network. Each of these networks can be interconnected so that a node in one network can reach a node in other networks. The network connection can be broadband, wireless, telephonic, satellite, or any type of network connection. A node can be a computer system, an endpoint representing users, and/or a device that can generate Interest or originate content.

In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, a consumer can generate an Interest for a piece of content and forward that Interest to a node in network 180. The piece of content can be stored at a node in network 180 by a publisher or content provider, who can be located inside or outside the network. For example, in FIG. 1, the Interest in a piece of content originates at node 105. If the content is not available at the node, the Interest flows to one or more nodes coupled to the first node. For example, in FIG. 1, the Interest flows (Interest flow 150) to node 115, which does not have the content available. Next, the Interest flows (Interest flow 155) from node 115 to node 125, which again does not have the content. The Interest then flows (Interest flow 160) to node 130, which does have the content available. The flow of the Content Object then retraces its path in reverse (content flows 165, 170, and 175) until it reaches node 105, where the content is delivered. Other processes such as authentication can be involved in the flow of content.

In network 180, any number of intermediate nodes (nodes 100-145) in the path between a content holder (node 130) and the Interest generation node (node 105) can participate in caching local copies of the content as it travels across the network. Caching reduces the network load for a second subscriber located in proximity to other subscribers by implicitly sharing access to the locally cached content.

The Manifest

In CCN, a manifest (also known as a catalog) is used to represent a collection of data. For example, a CCN node may contain a video collection that includes a large number of video files, and the manifest of the video collection can be an ordered list identifying the Content Objects corresponding to the video files. Note that, due to the size limit of a Content Object, a video file may span multiple Content Objects. Moreover, a CCN node may store content for a webpage, and the manifest for the web page identifies the different components of the webpage, such as the markup document and embedded objects (including Java scripts, image files, audio files, video files, etc.).

In the manifest, each Content Object is identified by its name and corresponding digest, where the digest is the hash value (often computed using a cryptographic hash function, such as hash function SHA-256) of the Content Object. In some embodiments, each Content Object is also identified by a modified time indicating the time that the content was modified. FIG. 2 presents a diagram illustrating the format of a manifest, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.

In FIG. 2, manifest 200 includes an ordered list of Content Objects identified by a collection name 204 and one or more of the following: a Content Object name 230.1-230.n; a digest 232.1-232.n; and a modified time 234.1-234.n. The digests 232.1-232.n include a hash value of the Content Object identified respectively by names 230.1-230.n. Manifest 200 also includes a root hash 202, which is an additive hash value based on the hash values 232.1-232.n of the individual Content Objects in the collection. Root hash 202 of manifest 200 is a unique identifier for manifest 200.

As shown in FIG. 2, manifest 200 can indicate a name and corresponding digest for each Content Object represented in the collection. Optionally, manifest 200 can also include a modified time for each Content Object represented in the collection. The use of the modified time field depends on the underlying application or service being performed. In addition to an ordered list, the manifest may also be structured as a synchronization tree, which contains Content Objects as well as nested collections of Content Objects.

In some embodiments, to download a file collection, a requester may need to first download the manifest. In certain situations, the manifest itself is protected, and before reading the manifest, the requester or content consumer needs to authenticate the manifest, and may also need to decrypt the manifest as well.

Parallel Content Retrieval

In CCN, every Content Object is signed and potentially encrypted. FIG. 3 presents a diagram illustrating an exemplary Content Object in content-centric networks. In FIG. 3, Content Object 300 includes a name component 302, a key-ID component 304, an optional key component 306, a payload component 308, and a signature component 312. Name component 302 is a non-cryptographic user-assigned string, which can be an HSVLI in a human-readable form or a flat name. Key-ID component 304 identifies a public key used to sign Content Object 300. The public key can be optionally included in Content Object 300 as key component 306. Payload component 308 includes the user data. Signature component 310 is a cryptographic signature that binds name component 302 to payload component 308. The signature can be generated using an RSA scheme. For example, the publisher of the content can generate the signature using its private key, which is verifiable using public key 306. Note that, instead of signing all the bytes, the signature is usually generated by signing a hash of name component 302, key-ID component 304, key component 306, and payload component 308, shown as a signature hash 310.

In some embodiments, Content Object 300 may be encrypted, and Content Object 300 may include an additional component that specifies the decryption key. In some further embodiments, an entire content component, which can be a file of any type, such as audio, video, JavaScript files, etc., may be encrypted and signed as a whole. For example, a large video file may span many Content Objects, and to ensure that the content of the file remain confidential, the entire video file, and hence the many Content Objects are encrypted. To guarantee the authenticity of each chunk of the file (or each Content Object), the publisher may sign each Content Object. Moreover, to bind all the chunks (Content Objects) together, the publisher may also sign all chunks of a content component as a whole. An identifier of the encryption key and the signature for the entire component may be inserted into the last chunk (Content Object) or be included in a separate Content Object.

Upon receiving the Content Objects, in order to authenticate the received Content Objects, the requester needs to verify the signing key. In some embodiments, the key-verification process involves contacting a trust authority to verify whether the key (specified by the key information included in the received Content Objects) is actually authorized to sign the content, and computing and verifying the signatures included in the received Content Objects. In addition, in order to access the encrypted content, the requester needs to obtain the decryption key. In certain situations, the keys that are required to decrypt the content (such as a movie) are generated based on the user trying to consume the content (such as a user viewing the movie). For example, when a user is downloading a movie, there might be session keys generated specifically for the user. The user needs to obtain those session keys. Moreover, in situations where the manifest is encrypted, the requester also needs to obtain the decryption key for the manifest. In conventional systems, the requester needs to download the manifest, the content, the authentication information for the manifest and the content, the decryption information (in order to obtain the decryption key) for the manifest and the content, and any possible revocation information for authentication, often in a sequential order. This means many round trips will be needed before the requester obtains all information needed for the consumption of the content.

FIG. 4 provides a diagram illustrating a conventional content-downloading process. In FIG. 4, a requester 402 is downloading a content collection from one or more responders 404. During operation, requester 402 starts the downloading process by issuing a set of Interest messages 406 to responder(s) 404 to request manifest 408. In some embodiments, manifest 408 includes an ordered list of Content Objects. Upon receiving manifest 408, which is returned to requester 402 as a set of Content Objects 410, requester 402 may need to send a request 412 to a trust authority 420, inquiring whether the key or keys used to sign Content Object set 410 are authorized key(s), and receive a response 414. Optionally, requester 402 may also send a request 416 to responder(s) 404 to request a session key, and receive a response 418. Note that the authentication request and the key request are sent in the form of Interests, and the responses are in the form of Content Objects. Once requester 402 authenticates and decrypts manifest 408, its reads manifest 408 (operation 422), and starts to request chunks of the content collection by sending additional sets of Interest messages, such as Interest sets 424 and 426. Depending on the size of the content collection, many Interests or sets of Interests may be needed to retrieve content chunks 430. In the event where content chunks 430 are signed as a whole, requester 402 may need to, upon completing the download of content chunks 430, send a request 432 to trust authority 420 to verify the signing key, and receive a response 434. In addition, if content chunks 430 are encrypted, requester 402 may need to request the decryption key, which can involve one or more round trips. Additional communication between requester 402 and trust authority 420 may include requester 402 requesting possible revocation information, such as a certification revocation, if any, from trust authority 420.

From FIG. 4, one can see that many round trips are needed for requester 402 to complete the downloading of the manifest and the content chunks, to authenticate the manifest and the content chunks (by verifying signatures), and to obtain decryption keys. In other words, a user or content consumer may need to wait for many round trips before he can consume the content. Such a long wait time is not desirable. For example, if a user intends to view a movie online, it is desirable that the user can start viewing front portions of the movie while downloading end portions of the movie. However, in conventional CCN systems where content is authenticated and decrypted after it is downloaded, the user may need to download the entire movie first before he can start viewing the movie.

To solve the problem of delayed content consumption, in some embodiments, when requesting a content collection, the requester sends out Interests for retrieving the content chunks and Interests for retrieving information needed for consumption of the content in parallel. Therefore, information, including authentication information and decryption information, that is needed for the consumption of the content can be retrieved in parallel with the content itself, and the user no longer needs to wait until all content chunks are downloaded before starting to consume the content. In the example of movie downloading, while downloading the first portion of a movie, the user may simultaneously obtain the session key and verify the authenticity of the received first portion. Subsequently, the user can start viewing the movie (after decryption) as the remaining portions of the movie are being downloaded. Similarly, if the content collection is a file library, the user may start to consume the already downloaded files while other files are still being downloaded.

FIG. 5 presents a diagram illustrating an exemplary process of downloading a content collection, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention. In FIG. 5, a requester 502 is requesting a content collection 510 from one or more responders 504. Content collection 510 includes various components, such as a manifest 512 and content chunks 514. Note that manifest 512 and content chunks 514 each may include multiple Content Objects that conform to CCN standards. Moreover, the Content Objects may be individually signed or signed as a whole. In some situations, manifest 512 and/or content chunks 514 can be encrypted, and requester 502 also needs to request decryption information 516 in order to access manifest 512 and/or content chunks 514. Decryption information 516 may indicate what types of key or keys are needed for decrypting content chunks 514.

Instead of requesting manifest 512, content chunks 514, and decryption information 516 one by one, requester 502 may send out Interests for them all at once. In other words, requester 502 can request the manifest, the content chunks, and the decryption information using a lump sum set of Interests. Note that, in some embodiments, the content chunks may include embedded objects whose names or hash values are not known to requester 502. In such a situation, requester 502 may need to first download and read the manifest before sending out a large set of Interests to request the content chunks along with the decryption information. In certain situations, the manifest and the embedded objects may be placed in a single content stream under one chunked namespace, and requester 502 can send out Interest sets in that chunked namespace to request, simultaneously, manifest 512 and content chunks 514.

Moreover, to authenticate manifest 512 and content chunks 514, requester 502 may also need to send a set of Interests to trust authority 506 to inquire about the signing keys. In some embodiments, requester 502 can send such an inquiry at the same time requester 502 is sending the initial set of Interests. In such a situation, because requester 502 has not yet downloaded manifest 512 or content chunks 514, requester 502 has no knowledge of what key or keys are used to sign manifest 512 and content chunks 514. However, even without such knowledge, requester 502 can send a request to trust authority 506, requesting a list of signing keys that are authorized to sign manifest 512 and/or content chunks 514. For example, if content collection 510 is under the namespace "/foo/abc," requester 502 may send a request to trust authority 506, requesting a list of signing keys authorized to sign under the namespace "/foo/abc."

In some embodiments, requester 502 may include, in the lump sum set of Interests, additional information that may be needed by responders 504 in order for responders 504 to send back Content Objects corresponding to the Interests. This additional information can include, but is not limited to: user information (such as user credentials) and certain payment information, or any other information required by the content provider.

In some embodiments, the parallel downloading of content and information needed for consumption of the content may be triggered by the initial set of Interests sent out by the requester for the content. For example, the requester may broadcast, over the network, a set of Interests under the namespace "/foo/abc/video/video_1." The Interests reach an intermediate system or node, such as a router, a gateway, a proxy server, or a cache server, which in turn determines that content chunks under the namespace "/foo/abc/video/video_1" are individually (or collectively) signed and encrypted. In some embodiments, the intermediate node may indicate to the requester that signature information and decryption information will be needed to consume the content. In further embodiments, the intermediate node may simultaneously issue, on behalf of the content requester, Interests for downloading the content, Interests for verifying the signatures (sent to the trust authority), and Interests for obtaining decryption information. The intermediate node may also issue an Interest to the trust authority to obtain possible revocation information for authentication.

In addition to issuing Interests for parallel downloading of content and other related information, the intermediate node may also be responsible for processing the responses to the Interests. For example, the intermediate node may receive a list of authorized signing keys, compare the list with signatures included in the content chunks to determine the authenticity of the content chunks, and then forward the authentication result to the content requester. Moreover, if the response indicates the type of decryption key needed for decrypting the content chunks, the intermediate node may obtain (via certain computation) the decryption key and forward it to the requester. Note that the process of determining what information is needed and generating parallel requests (Interests) to download the content along with related information may be transparent to an application that requests the content. In some embodiments, the application only needs to send one Interest to request a content collection, and processes running on other layers are handling the generation of additional Interests for the parallel downloading.

FIG. 6 presents a diagram illustrating an exemplary architecture of an all-at-once content-requesting module, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention. In FIG. 6, all-at-once content-requesting module 600 includes a receiving module 602, an analysis module 604, an information-gathering module 606, a request-generation module 608, and a forwarding module 610. Receiving module 602 is responsible for receiving Interests for a content collection. In some embodiments, receiving module 602 may receive a single initial Interest or a set of initial Interests, requesting a piece of content under a certain namespace. Analysis module 604 is responsible for analyzing the initial Interest and determining what additional information will be needed for the delivery and consumption of the content. For example, analysis module 604 may determine, based on the received Interest, that a payment is needed before the content can be delivered to the requester, or analysis module 604 may determine that the content chunks are encrypted and decryption information will be needed for consumption of the content. In some embodiments, analysis module 604 may directly interact with the content producer (based on the namespace specified by the initial Interest) to determine what type of additional information is needed. Additionally, analysis module 604 may interact with a directory service to find out what information is needed.

Information-gathering module 606 is responsible for gathering, from the requester, additional information that is required before the content can be delivered. For example, information-gathering module 606 may collect user credential and/or payment information from the requester. Request-generation module 608 is responsible for generating sets of parallel Interests that can be used to request the content chunks as well as information (such as authentication information and decryption information) needed for the consumption of the content. In some embodiments, request-generation module 608 generates the sets of parallel Interests based on the analysis outcome of analysis module 604 and the information gathered by information-gathering module 606. For example, if authentication is needed, request-generation module 608 generates requests that can be sent to a trust authority for authentication purposes. Moreover, if payment information is needed, request-generation module 608 generates content requests that include the payment information. Forwarding module 610 is responsible for forwarding the generated set of requests in parallel to the trust authority and to the content provider.

FIG. 7 presents a diagram illustrating an exemplary process of requesting content, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention. During operation, the system receives an Interest for a content piece (operation 702), and determines, based on the received Interest, additional information that may be needed for the delivery and consumption of the content piece (operation 704). Based on the determination, the system generates multiple Interests or sets of Interests for requesting content chunks (which can include a catalog or manifest) and information that is needed for the consumption of the content, such as authentication information, decryption information, and possible authentication revocation information (operation 706). For example, the system may generate a request for a list of signing keys that are authorized to sign under a particular namespace. Note that if the content or its catalog is not encrypted, there is no need to generate Interest for decryption information.

The system then simultaneously forwards the generated Interests or sets of Interests to their intended destinations, which can include a trust authority and a node that has cached copies of the content chunks (operation 708). Once the Interests are forwarded, the system may start to receive responses, which can include content chunks or authentication results (operation 710). In some embodiments, authentication responses may include a list identifying signing keys that are authorized to sign Content Objects under a particular namespace. The system optionally caches the received responses, including authentication responses, such that subsequent requests can be served faster (operation 712).

Note that all-at-once content-requesting module 600 shown in FIG. 6 may be located at the same local machine as the content requester, or all-at-once content-requesting module 600 may be located at a remote, intermediate system, such as a router, a gateway, a proxy or cache server, etc. Similarly, the content-requesting process shown in FIG. 7 may occur in a local system or a remote system.

Also note that the purpose for issuing multiple Interests or sets of Interests in parallel is to reduce the number of round trips needed before a content requester can start consuming the requested content. Ideally, a requester may start to consume the content within one or even less than one round trip, because the Interests for content chunks and the related authentication or decryption information are sent out simultaneously. In practice, however, more than one round trip or more than one message exchange may be needed before the requester receives the content chunks and the additional information needed for consumption of the content. For example, in the event of some Content Objects including external links, the requester may need to first resolve the external link, and then issue Interests following the links.

Computer and Communication System

FIG. 8 illustrates an exemplary system for parallel content retrieval, in accordance with an embodiment. A system 800 for parallel content retrieval comprises a processor 810, a memory 820, and a storage 830. Storage 830 typically stores instructions that can be loaded into memory 820 and executed by processor 810 to perform the methods mentioned above. In one embodiment, the instructions in storage 830 can implement an Interest analysis module 832, a parallel requests generation module 834, and a parallel requests forwarding module 836, all of which can be in communication with each other through various means.

In some embodiments, modules 832, 834, and 836 can be partially or entirely implemented in hardware and can be part of processor 810. Further, in some embodiments, the system may not include a separate processor and memory. Instead, in addition to performing their specific tasks, modules 832, 834, and 836, either separately or in concert, may be part of general- or special-purpose computation engines.

Storage 830 stores programs to be executed by processor 810. Specifically, storage 830 stores a program that implements a system (application) for facilitating parallel content retrieval. During operation, the application program can be loaded from storage 830 into memory 820 and executed by processor 810. As a result, system 800 can perform the functions described above. System 800 can be coupled to an optional display 880 (which can be a touch screen display), keyboard 860, and pointing device 870; system 800 can also be coupled via one or more network interfaces to network 882.

The data structures and code described in this detailed description are typically stored on a computer-readable storage medium, which may be any device or medium that can store code and/or data for use by a computer system. The computer-readable storage medium includes, but is not limited to, volatile memory, non-volatile memory, magnetic and optical storage devices such as disk drives, magnetic tape, CDs (compact discs), DVDs (digital versatile discs or digital video discs), or other media capable of storing computer-readable media now known or later developed.

The methods and processes described in the detailed description section can be embodied as code and/or data, which can be stored in a computer-readable storage medium as described above. When a computer system reads and executes the code and/or data stored on the computer-readable storage medium, the computer system performs the methods and processes embodied as data structures and code and stored within the computer-readable storage medium.

Furthermore, methods and processes described herein can be included in hardware modules or apparatus. These modules or apparatus may include, but are not limited to, an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) chip, a field-programmable gate array (FPGA), a dedicated or shared processor that executes a particular software module or a piece of code at a particular time, and/or other programmable-logic devices now known or later developed. When the hardware modules or apparatus are activated, they perform the methods and processes included within them.

The above description is presented to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the embodiments, and is provided in the context of a particular application and its requirements. Various modifications to the disclosed embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the general principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments and applications without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure. Thus, the present invention is not limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein.

* * * * *

References


uspto.report is an independent third-party trademark research tool that is not affiliated, endorsed, or sponsored by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) or any other governmental organization. The information provided by uspto.report is based on publicly available data at the time of writing and is intended for informational purposes only.

While we strive to provide accurate and up-to-date information, we do not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, reliability, or suitability of the information displayed on this site. The use of this site is at your own risk. Any reliance you place on such information is therefore strictly at your own risk.

All official trademark data, including owner information, should be verified by visiting the official USPTO website at www.uspto.gov. This site is not intended to replace professional legal advice and should not be used as a substitute for consulting with a legal professional who is knowledgeable about trademark law.

© 2024 USPTO.report | Privacy Policy | Resources | RSS Feed of Trademarks | Trademark Filings Twitter Feed